(SHORT
NOTES FROM STRATEGY TOOLS:
Keller's Brand Equity Model, also known
as the Customer-Based Brand Equity (CBBE) Model, is use to build a strong
brand, shape how customers think and feel about the product. Kevin Lane Keller, a marketing professor at
the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College, developed the model and
published it in his widely used textbook, "Strategic Brand Management."
There is a need to build the right type
of experiences around the brand, so that customers have specific, positive
thoughts, feelings, beliefs, opinions, and perceptions about it. When the brand equity is strong, customers
will buy more, and they'll recommend it to other people. The customers more
loyal, and they're less likely to be lose to competitors.
Figure 1 – Keller's Brand Equity Model
The model illustrates the 4 steps that need
to be followed in order to build strong brand equity. The 4 steps represent the 4 fundamental
questions that customers usually ask, often subconsciously, about the brand. The 4 steps consist of 6 building blocks that
must be in place to reach the top of the pyramid, and to develop a successful
brand.
Step 1: Brand Identity
Who Are You?
|
- create
"brand salience," or awareness
- need
to make sure
- brand
stands out
- customers
recognize and are aware of
it
- ensure
that brand perceptions are "correct" at key stages of the
buying process
- steps
- need
to know who the customers
are
- Research
the market
- gain
a thorough understanding of how customers see the brand
- explore
the brand with
- different
market segments
- different
needs
- different
relationships
- identify
how customers narrow down
their choices and deciding
on the choice of brand
- customers’
decision-making processes
- classification
of product or brand
- how
well does the brand stand out at key stages of this process
- communicate
to the customers about the importance
product/brand
- understand
whether clients perceive
your brand as you want them to
- address
specific perceptual problems
- Identify
the actions that need to be taken
|
Step 2: Brand Meaning
What Are You?
|
- identify and communicate your brand
- overcome the two building blocks: "performance"
and "imagery"
- "Performance" - how well the
product meets customers' needs
- five categories:
- primary characteristics and
features;
- product reliability,
durability, and serviceability;
- service effectiveness,
efficiency, and empathy;
- style and design; and
- price
- "Imagery" - how well the brand
meets customers' needs on a social and psychological level
- Steps
- product must meet, and, ideally, exceed customers’
expectations
- build customers’ loyalty
- identify your customers' needs using
- Critical to Quality Tree Model
- Kano Model Analysis
- translate the needs into a high quality
product
- decide the type of experience you want the
customers to have
- create a "brand personality”
- identify any gaps between where you are now
and where you want to be
- bridge the gaps
|
Step 3: Brand Response
What Do I Think, or Feel, About You?
|
- customers' responses to brand fall into two
categories
- "judgments"
- 4 key categories
- Quality
- Credibility – expertise & innovation,
trustworthiness, and likability
- Consideration
- Superiority
- "feelings"
- six positive brand feelings
- warmth,
- fun,
- excitement,
- security,
- social approval, and
- self-respect
- steps
- examine the 4 categories of judgments
- improve the actual and perceived quality
- enhance brand's credibility
- relevancy of marketing strategy communicating the brand
- do product or brand compare with those of competitors
- think carefully about the six brand feelings
- decide marketing strategy focus
- enhance these feelings for the customers
- Identify actions
|
Step 4: Brand Resonance
How Much of a Connection Would I Like to Have With You?
|
- customers feel a deep, psychological bond
with your brand
- 4 categories:
- Behavioral loyalty (regular, repeat
purchases)
- Attitudinal attachment (love the brand, see
it as a special purchase)
- Sense of community
- Active engagement
- Steps
- strengthen each resonance category
- encourage behavioral loyalty
- Consider gifts with purchase
- Organize customer loyalty programs
- reward customers who are champions of the
brand
- increase customer involvement with the brand
or product
|
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